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The Wallflower Vol. 04

Tomoko Hayakawa

£8.00
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A BACHELORETTE WITH BANGS Four gorgeous yet determined guys are still struggling to turn their reluctant, homely housemate Sunako into a proper lady. So far, the dreamy quartet have miraculously managed to cover up Sunako's total lack of progress from their landlady, Sunako's aunt, who is eager to see results. She has even set Sunako up on a blind date! If the aunt finds out that Sunako is still clinging to the darkness, their rent is sure to skyrocket. It looks like the only way out is to convince the meddling relative that Sunako already has a boyfriend. But which of the four guys could possibly pull off such a demanding role?

ISBN 9780350000000
Publisher Del Rey

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Tomoko Hayakawa

Tomoko Hayakawa is a Japanese manga artist born in 1976, best known for The Wallflower (Yamato Nadeshiko Shichi Henge), a long-running shojo comedy that ran in Bessatsu Friend from 2000 to 2017 and accumulated a devoted global following for its energetic subversion of shojo convention and its genuinely funny ensemble character work. Before The Wallflower, she produced shorter works that established her comedic voice and her distinctive character design style.

The Wallflower's premise is a careful inversion of standard shojo romance mechanics: four beautiful boys have been given free housing in their landlady's mansion on condition that they transform her niece, Sunako Nakahara, into a 'proper lady.' Sunako, however, has no interest in being transformed. She is obsessed with horror films, anatomical models, and all things dark and gothic; she finds beautiful people physically painful to look at (they 'gleam,' in her perception, like supernatural beings); and she responds to most attempts at social interaction by retreating into a chibi version of herself and radiating maximum antisocial energy. The comedy arises from the gap between this and the beautiful boys' progressively desperate attempts to fulfil their mission.

What Hayakawa does with this premise over seventeen years of serialization is more interesting than a simple comedy setup would suggest. Sunako's character — her complete indifference to conventional femininity, her expertise in traditionally 'unfeminine' subjects, her contentment with her own peculiarities — is consistently presented as valid rather than as a problem to be solved. The nominal goal of the series (transforming Sunako into a proper lady) is persistently and deliberately never achieved, because Hayakawa is not interested in that transformation. The romance between Sunako and the character Kyohei, which develops slowly and entirely on Sunako's own terms, is similarly unconventional for shojo manga.

The 2006 anime adaptation, produced by Nippon Animation, introduced the series to a wider international audience. The Wallflower remains a celebrated entry in the shojo tradition for readers who appreciate its specific combination of chaotic comedy, gothic aesthetics, and genuine affection for a female protagonist who refuses to become more conventionally palatable.

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